"There is no greatness where simplicity, goodness and truth
are absent."
Leo Tolstoy

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Steve and Mitt

Haroon Siddiqui, in this morning's Toronto Star, points to the similarities between Stephen Harper and Mitt Romney -- who was rejected by 51% of American voters last week. Harper was rejected by 60% of Canadian voters, but he won the election:

That’s our parliamentary democracy. Still, it’s useful to remind
ourselves of his policies that are not in sync with majority Canadian
opinion but mesh with those of Romney and the Republicans.

He and they advocate smaller
government and lower taxes, deficits and debts. But they believe in pork
barrelling, milking government dry for their favoured projects. They
also spend big on the military. That leads to bigger deficits and debts,
as under George W. Bush and Harper (forcing the prime minister to now
start cutting back on defence).

The Harper Conservatives and Romney
Republicans don’t like gun controls or environmental regulations. They
are oblivious to growing inequality. They treat adversaries as enemies —
if you’re not with Harper, you are to be demonized, ideally destroyed.

Harper's ascendancy with 40% support is depressing, but not new. Those are the rules of the game. However, if there is a lesson to be learned from Obama's victory, it is that elections are still won on the ground. That comes down to knowing where the votes are and getting them to the polls.

4 comments:

It is hard to compare two politicians when one has a track record and the other does not. In your article you are painting Romney with the Bush brush.

It would have been better to just compare American Republican views and Canadian Conservative views. Here there are differences and degree as well as kind reflecting the differences in our two National cultures.

I am not sure that the Republican Party in the United States can ever bring itself to embrace minorities to the degree minorities would like. American Culture is still deeply racist. Those drawn to the Republican Party may never accept multiculturalism.

Also, I am not sure Romney could put social issues so much a part of the extreme elements in the party, on the back burner, as Harper has. The cultural centers of our countries are quite different.

Historically, the cultural centres of both countries have been quite different, Philip.

What is deeply troubling about Mr. Harper is his admiration for things American -- particularly the American concept of the never ending and nasty political campaign.

It's true that slavery has never been at the centre of the Canadian experience. But, if anyone believes Canada is morally superior to the United States because people here were never declared "chattel," they obviously have not bothered to review the plight of Canada's native peoples.

Thanks for this Owen. It puts the lie - at least for the moment - to the argument from Lawrence Martin that Romney could have learned a lot from Harper.

Again, as I commented on that story a few days ago, it is the differences in the system which give us Stephen Harper...he (like Romney) would never have been elected in the US,

Sadly, Harper is using many of the same devices Romney used to solidify his power here in Canada.

What was, until recently, a fairly decent electoral system is rapidly succumbing to the corrosive effects of Harper's 'reforms'. What's badly needed here - as you point out - is a realization that Harper can ONLY be defeated if the 60% find a way to combine their efforts.

About Me

A retired English teacher, I now write about public policy and, occasionally, personal experience. I leave it to the reader to determine if I practice what I preached to my students for thirty-two years.